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      Frontal lobes and human memory: insights from functional neuroimaging.

      1 ,
      Brain : a journal of neurology
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Abstract

          The new functional neuroimaging techniques, PET and functional MRI (fMRI), offer sufficient experimental flexibility and spatial resolution to explore the functional neuroanatomical bases of different memory stages and processes. They have had a particular impact on our understanding of the role of the frontal cortex in memory processing. We review the insights that have been gained, and attempt a synthesis of the findings from functional imaging studies of working memory, encoding in episodic memory and retrieval from episodic memory. Though these different aspects of memory have usually been studied in isolation, we suggest that there is sufficient convergence with respect to frontal activations to make such a synthesis worthwhile. We concentrate in particular on three regions of the lateral frontal cortex--ventrolateral, dorsolateral and anterior--that are consistently activated in these studies, and attribute these activations to the updating/maintenance of information, the selection/manipulation/monitoring of that information, and the selection of processes/subgoals, respectively. We also acknowledge a number of empirical inconsistencies associated with this synthesis, and suggest possible reasons for these. More generally, we predict that the resolution of questions concerning the functional neuroanatomical subdivisions of the frontal cortex will ultimately depend on a fuller cognitive psychological fractionation of memory control processes, an enterprise that will be guided and tested by experimentation. We expect that the neuroimaging techniques will provide an important part of this enterprise.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Brain
          Brain : a journal of neurology
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          0006-8950
          0006-8950
          May 2001
          : 124
          : Pt 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Research Department of Psychiatry, Cambridge University, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK. pcf22@cam.ac.uk
          Article
          10.1093/brain/124.5.849
          11335690
          7a6ecc69-c07b-4692-a92e-1172bc1b8fa5
          History

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